Jeremy Owens

Ardelyx jumps more than 60% after positive study resultsArdelyx Inc. shares soared more than 60% in after-hours trading Wednesday, after the company reported positive results for a study of a proposed drug. Ardelyx said a second Phase 3 study of tenapanor, a drug targeting irritable bowel syndrome with constipation, reached its primary endpoint and all secondary endpoints, and was well-tolerated by patients. "These results are a game-changer for patients with IBS-C, their treating physicians and for Ardelyx as a company," Ardelyx Chief Executive Mike Raab said in . The same drug previously . Ardelyx shares topped $8.50 in late trading after closing at $5.40.

Tesla Model 3 issues could delay or kill its ‘iPhone moment,’ analysts say Tesla stock posts first decline in six sessionsTesla Inc.’s early issues with producing the Model 3 could delay or even destroy the chances for the electric car maker’s ‘iPhone moment,” Barclays analysts said in a note Monday morning.

Micron to sell $1 billion in fresh shares amid memory-price spike, stock dipsMicron Technology Inc. shares dipped nearly 3% in late trading Tuesday after the memory-chip company said it would sell about $1 billion in fresh stock as the company trades at its highest prices since the dot-com boom. Micron said underwriters had access to about $150 million in additional shares it could offer at the public offering price, which has yet to be determined. Micron will use the proceeds from the offering to pay down debt, with $476 million earmarked for notes set to mature in 2023. Micron closed at $41.98 and reached $42 in intraday trading Tuesday, its highest prices since 2001, but shares fell lower than $41 in late trading after the announcement. , which has , and said in its most recent earnings report . Micron stock is up 91% so far in 2017, as the S&P 500 index has gained 13.7%.

Everything Google announced at its Pixel event Alphabet shows off new smartphones, Home speakers and Clips camera for holiday shopping seasonAlphabet Inc. introduced new Pixel smartphones, Home smart speakers and a new clip-on camera called Clips at a launch event in San Francisco, as it looks to challenge Apple Inc. and other hardware makers in the holiday shopping season.

Comedian Ralphie May dies at 45Comedian Ralphie May died Friday at the age of 45, . May was known for coming in second on the first edition of the reality-competition show "Last Comic Standing," and used that fame to become an internationally recognized comedian. The announcement said he had been struggling with pneumonia and was found dead Friday morning at a private residence in Las Vegas due to cardiac arrest.

Funko, maker of popular Pop figurines, plans IPOFunko Inc. , which makes pop-culture memorabilia including Pop figurines, filed for an initial public offering with the Securities and Exchange Commission on Friday. In its original filing, the company targeted proceeds of $100 million, though that is usually a placeholder figure that will be updated in subsequent filings. The company reported sales of $426.7 million in 2016, up from $274.1 million in the prior year, for revenue growth of more than 55%. The company is profitable, with net income of $11.9 million in the 2015 calendar year and $26.9 million in 2016. Through the first six months of 2017, Funko reports a loss of $10.2 million on sales of $203.8 million, with revenue growing 15.6% from the same period the year before. The company, which is backed by private-equity firm Acon Investments, plans to list on the Nasdaq exchange under the ticker symbol FNKO. The offering will be led by Goldman Sachs, JP Morgan and BofA Merrill Lynch.

Tesla pushes back Semi unveiling amid Model 3 issues, Puerto Rico workTesla Inc. is delaying the unveiling of its electric semi truck, . Chief Executive Elon Musk that the event would be pushed back to Nov. 16 because of as well as . "Diverting resources to fix Model 3 bottlenecks & increase battery production for Puerto Rico & other affected areas," Musk said. Tesla shares slipped about 0.5% in late trading, after closing with a 0.4% increase at $356.88. The stock has gained 67% this year, as the S&P 500 index has gained 14%.

MongoDB IPO seeks valuation of less than $1 billionMongoDB Inc. , a database-software company valued at $1.6 billion by private investors, is looking for a valuation of less than $1 billion in . The company updated its filing with the Securities and Exchange Commission on Friday morning and said that it expects to sell 8 million shares at a price of $18 to $20 a share. At the top of that range, the company would take in $160 million at a market capitalization of about $980 million. MongoDB, which has raised more than $300 million in private investment, was valued at $1.6 billion in December 2014, . The company, , plans to list under the ticker symbol "MDB" on the Nasdaq.

GoPro rebounds after Morgan Stanley downplays Google Clips threatGoPro Inc. rebounded Friday morning from a two-day downturn that began when Alphabet Inc.'s Google introduced a wearable camera seen as a potential competitor to GoPro's core products. After falling 13% in two days, GoPro stock moved as much as 5% higher in early trading Friday after Morgan Stanley analysts wrote that the sell-off was overdone and played down the threat from Google. The Google Clips camera is "not designed as a [point-of-view] camera, not wearable, not ruggedized, lacking sound, image stabilization, high frame-rate and a host of other features," the analysts noted. "In short, Google Clips appears to address a subset of the needs of the smart-home market and not GoPro's traditional active-lifestyle market, so the sell-off seems a bit over-done to us." Morgan Stanley has an overweight rating on the stock with a $15 price target, the highest tracked by FactSet. GoPro stock has fallen 39.7% in the past year, as the S&P 500 index has gained 18.1%.

Switch prices IPO above range at $17, raises more than $500 millionData-center operator Switch Inc. priced its initial public offering higher than expected Thursday evening to pull in more than half a billion dollars. The Las Vegas-based data-center company, , announced that it would sell 31.25 million shares at $17 apiece, after . At that price, Switch stands to collect at least $531.25 million at a valuation of about $4.2 billion; underwriters have access to another 4.7 million shares, which could push the take even higher. The company has said it will use the proceeds to buy out investors in Switch Ltd. and take control of that company though Switch Inc., which was just incorporated in 2017. A multi-class share structure will allow founder and Chief Executive Rob Roy to maintain control, as his shares will have 10 times the voting rights of common shares. Switch is expected to begin trading Friday morning on the New York Stock Exchange under the ticker symbol SWCH.

GoPro stock falls as Google introduces new clip-on cameraGoPro Inc. stock dropped suddenly Tuesday as Alphabet Inc.'s Google introduced a new clip-on, stand-alone camera that could challenge GoPro's core hardware. Google Clips is a small camera that costs $249, while the new camera GoPro introduced last month starts at $499. GoPro shares dropped more than 5% in the minutes after Google introduced the new product, after previously being close to break-even on the day. Google also introduced and at the event in San Francisco.

Google launches new Pixel 2 smartphonesAlphabet Inc.'s Google introduced new Pixel smartphones for the holiday shopping season at an event Tuesday in San Francisco. The Pixel 2 and Pixel 2 XL follow Google's move into making its own smartphones last year, after previously focusing on partnerships with hardware makers who use Google's Android operating system. The new Pixels are , which is rolling out new iPhones for the holiday season. Google focused on the utility of its Google Assistant and Google Photos software offerings in the new phones, as well as augmented and virtual reality uses. The Google Pixel 2 starts at $649 and the Pixel 2 XL starts at $849, and comes with a free Google Home Mini smart speaker, part of . For comparison, Apple's new iPhone 8 starts at $699, the larger iPhone 8 Plus starts at $799, and the iPhone X, when it goes on sale, will start at $999.

Google launches new Home smart speakers, including high-end Apple rivalAlphabet Inc.'s Google showed off an expanded line of its Home smart speakers at an event Wednesday in San Francisco, including a new high-end version mean to challenge Apple Inc.'s HomePod and Sonos devices. Google introduced a smaller and cheaper form factor called Google Home Mini, similar to Amazon.com Inc.'s Echo Dot, for $49. Google Home Max, a larger speaker with better sound quality, will cost $399, $50 more than Apple's HomePod, which and plans to begin selling to consumers in December. Google will also launch Google Home Max in December, with a free year of the YouTube Red streaming service. The standard Google Home smart speaker, which Alphabet began selling last year, costs $129.

Pixel launch will test Google hardware strategy and Apple rivalry Alphabet expected to show off new Pixel smartphones and other gadgets WednesdayAlphabet Inc. will look to impress gadget lovers Wednesday with a new line of devices for the holiday shopping season, but the company’s event will also be important to determine if the money Google is spending to produce its own hardware and challenge Apple Inc. is worth the cost.

CytomX stock rockets 35% after deal with AmgenCytomX Therapeutics Inc. roared 35% higher in after-hours trading Tuesday to prices that would be record highs after with biotech giant Amgen Inc. The companies will collaborate on an immuno-oncology product focusing on t-cell therapeutics developed by CytomX, with CytomX leading early development and Amgen taking over for later development and commercialization. Amgen is paying CytomX $40 million and buying $20 million in CytomX stock, and CytomX has the opportunity to earn up to $455 million based on milestones and share in profits from the U.S. while receiving royalties on non-U.S. sales of the drug. Amgen also receives the right to develop and commercialize three undisclosed CytomX candidates, with CytomX eligible to receive $950 million based on the performance of those therapies as well as royalties. CytomX stock topped $25 in late trading, a level it has never cracked in regular trading, after closing at $19. Amgen shares were stable in after-hours action.

Every Yahoo account was affected by 2013 hack, Verizon now saysVerizon Communications Inc. announced today that a 2013 hack into Yahoo's network affected all Yahoo accounts, roughly 3 billion, after previous estimates said 1 billion accounts were affected. Yahoo, which was acquired by Verizon after the hack was disclosed and , is notifying affected accounts that were not previously contacted. Verizon pointed users to , originally disclosed years after the hack in December 2016, for additional information.

Tesla Model 3 runs into ‘production bottleneck’ Tesla produces a small percentage of Elon Musk’s goal for new car in first quarter of production, stock falls in after-hours tradingTesla Inc.’s Model 3 rollout didn’t start at ludicrous speed, as the company only produced about 260 of the new cars in the third quarter after Chief Executive Elon Musk predicted production of 1,500 cars in September alone.

Roku IPO topped $250 million, final tally showsRoku Inc.'s initial public offering topped $250 million after underwriting banks sold extra shares, the company revealed Monday. With the sale of the so-called greenshoe, extra shares made available to the banks beyond the stated IPO target, Roku sold slightly more than 18 million shares at $14 apiece to pull in about $252.3 million. The company does not receive all of that money, as venture investors sold 7.67 million of those shares while Roku received proceeds from the sale of 10.35 million shares, or $144.9 million. Roku shares , and on Wall Street, but and closed at $23.56.

Security startup ForeScout files for IPOForeScout Technologies Inc. , a network-security software company valued at $1 billion by private investors, filed Monday for an initial public offering. The company, founded in 2000, targeted a $100 million goal for the IPO in , though that figure is usually a placeholder that will be updated in later filings. Forescout plans to list on the Nasdaq exchange under the ticker symbol FSCT after raising more than $150 million in venture investment with a most recent valuation of $1 billion, . The company reported revenue of $166.8 million in 2016, up from $126 million in 2015. In the first six months of 2017, it had revenue of $90.6 million, up from $68.7 million in the same period the year before. Net losses are also growing, with the company reporting a net loss of $27.3 million in 2015, $74.8 million in 2016, and $47.7 million in the first six months of this year. The IPO will be led by Morgan Stanley, J.P. Morgan and Citibank, according to the SEC filing.

Tesla deliveries hit by 'production bottleneck' for Model 3Tesla Inc. lived up to expectations for car deliveries in the third quarter, but the company's new Model 3 sedan got off to a slow start due to production issues. The electric-car company said Monday afternoon that it delivered 26,150 vehicles in the quarter, slightly beating estimates. However, the company delivered only 220 of its newest car, the Model 3, after . "Model 3 production was less than anticipated due to production bottlenecks," the company said in . "Although the vast majority of manufacturing subsystems at both our California car plant and our Nevada Gigafactory are able to operate at high rate, a handful have taken longer to activate than expected." The company said that it expected to deliver more than 100,000 Model S and Model X vehicles this year, which would beat its 2016 performance by more than 30%. , but closed with a 0.1% gain before falling back to losses of 0.7% to 1.3% in late trading following the release of the news.

Immelt leaves GE board, new CEO Flannery takes chairman postJeff Immelt stepped down from the board of General Electric Co. on Monday, the company reported, giving the chairman's chair to his CEO successor, John Flannery. Immelt passed the CEO helm to Flannery on June 12, but GE said at the time that he would stay on as chairman of the board until the end of the year. In Monday's announcement, though, the company said "in light of Mr. Immelt's determination that the CEO transition has proceeded smoothly," he was turning over the chairman position early and stepping down from the board. Immelt also retired as director and chairman of Baker Hughes, a GE company, and passed on the chairman role to that company's CEO, Lorenzo Simonelli. GE shares gained 0.2% in late trading.

Tesla declines as investors await quarterly delivery numbersTesla Inc. stock fell more than 1% Monday morning, ahead of the expected release of the electric car maker's quarterly delivery numbers. Tesla reports how many cars it delivered in a quarter within three days of the end of the period, which concluded at the end of September. This quarter's number will include the first Model 3 deliveries, after the company launched its important sedan aimed at the mass market in the quarter. Analysts on average expect about 26,000 third-quarter deliveries, with about 1,300 Model 3 units included, after and . Tesla shares fell as much as 1.6% early in Monday's session before recapturing some of the losses, continuing a rough period for the stock, which has fallen 6.3% in the past three months as the S&P 500 has gained 4%. Tesla is still up 58.5% for the year.

GoPro falls, analyst questions pricing of new Hero 6 cameraGoPro Inc. stock fell more than 4% at times in Friday morning trades after analysts checked in on . Wedbush analyst Alicia Reese noted that the $499 price of GoPro's new entry in its flagship Hero line, the Hero 6, could prevent it from reaching a mass audience. "The improved specs will appeal to the GoPro enthusiast, but the average consumer will likely opt for the HERO5 or competitor cameras given its high price," Reese wrote. Raymond James analyst Tavis McCourt noted that the pricing was the same as the 2014 Hero offering, the Hero 4 Black; 2014 was the last year GoPro managed to turn a profit. In 2015, Chief Executive Nick Woodman , beginning a slide that has damaged GoPro's balance sheet and stock price since . GoPro shares fell to as low as $10.98 in early trading Friday, after closing Thursday at $11.48, and have fallen 33.6% in the past year as the S&P 500 has gained 16.7%.

PTC Therapeutics gains after FDA panel votes against drug approvalPTC Therapeutics Inc. stock gained 10% in after-hours action Thursday after trading was halted for the entire regular session as a Food and Drug Administration panel discussed the company's Duchenne muscular dystrophy drug. The panel eventually voted not to approve the drug, saying that more testing was required to prove its efficacy, though they did not completely reject the drug. The FDA does not have to follow the panel's recommendation, as it showed in from Sarepta Therapeutics Inc. despite a panel recommendation against the approval. After being halted at Wednesday's closing price of $17.46 all day, PTC shares resumed trading just before 6 p.m. Eastern time Thursday and topped $19.

UPDATE: Roku gains as much as 65% in trading debut after IPORoku Inc. shares jumped more than 65% Thursday on their first day of trade after the company's initial public offering, adding to an initial $1.3 billion valuation. The company, which makes devices that allow consumers to stream media to their televisions, . Shares began trading Thursday morning on the Nasdaq at $15.78, 12.7% higher than the IPO price, then moved as high as $23.06 in afternoon trade. Roku raised $219 million in the IPO, with the company getting $126 million and selling stockholders Menlo Ventures and Sky Ventures Ltd. taking the rest. Underwriters have access to 2.35 million more shares, which would be split between the company and selling stockholders if they are sold.

GoPro shows off new Hero6, Fusion camerasGoPro Inc. showed off two new cameras Thursday as the company approaches an important holiday season. Chief Executive Nick Woodman took the stage at an event in San Francisco and showed off a new 360-degree camera called Fusion that can record spherical video and costs $699, with shipments starting in November. Woodman also introduced the new Hero 6 camera, the latest in GoPro's core line of action cameras, and focused on the camera's ability to quickly upload footage to a smartphone. The Hero 6 is available now for $499, and can be bundled with GoPro's Karma drone for $1,199. GoPro has suffered in the last two holiday shopping seasons, after and . GoPro stock, which topped $90 a share after its initial public offering, has dropped to lower than $10 a share at times in the past year amid the fallout from lackluster sales. Shares were down 1.4% at $11.53 as the consumer-facing product launch event ended Thursday; GoPro also planned a conference call with investors and analysts later in the day.

Facebook drops stock split, Zuckerberg credits stock's riseFacebook Inc. will not execute a stock split that creates a non-voting class of shares after facing an investor lawsuit, Chief Executive Mark Zuckerberg announced Friday afternoon. Zuckerberg wanted the stock split to ensure he remained in control of Facebook even while donating a massive amount of his stock to an LLC he and his wife Priscilla created to support philanthropic causes. In his announcement on Facebook, Zuckerberg said the increase in Facebook's stock price allows him to avoid creating a non-voting class of stock. "Over the past year and a half, Facebook's business has performed well and the value of our stock has grown to the point that I can fully fund our philanthropy and retain voting control of Facebook for 20 years or more," Zuckerberg wrote. "As a result, I've asked our board to withdraw the proposal to reclassify our stock -- and the board has agreed." Facebook stock has increased 48.2% in 2017, pushing its market capitalization to near $500 billion, while the S&P 500 index has gained 11.7% in that time. Zuckerberg was set to testify next week in a Delaware court where investors were fighting the split, but that session was suddenly canceled Friday, amid rumors of a settlement between Facebook and investors.

Hewlett Packard Enterprise to lay off 5,000 workers, Bloomberg reportsHewlett Packard Enterprise Co. plans to cut about 10% of its staff, or 5,000 workers, based on anonymous sources. HPE has been in constant flux since Chief Executive Meg Whitman split the former Hewlett-Packard in two in 2015, creating the business-focused company she runs and HP Inc. , the consumer-focused printer and personal-computer business. After HPE's most recent earnings report, which came on the heels of a spin-off of much of HPE's software business, Whitman said HPE was about to HPE shares gained 0.7% in late trading Thursday, after closing with a 1.2% gain at $13.79.

Blue Apron gains after Albertsons agrees to buy meal-kit rivalBlue Apron Holdings Inc. shares gained Wednesday afternoon after grocer Albertsons Co. . Albertsons, a private company that owns grocery-store chains including its namesake, Safeway and Vons, did not disclose the price paid for Plated. Plated offers meal kits through the mail, like Blue Apron, but will now make that company's offerings available in some of its 2,300-plus grocery stores nationwide. Blue Apron shares gained more than 3% to $5.40 in late trading, after falling 5.5% in the regular session to $5.22. Shares have fallen by as much as 50% from the $10 price commanded in , amid

Apple admits issues with Apple Watch connectivity, stock fallsApple Inc. shares declined Wednesday morning after the tech company reportedly admitted there are issues with connectivity of its new Apple Watch Series 3. The new Apple smartwatch is , without having to be electronically tethered to an iPhone, but . According to , Apple admitted an issue in an official statement, saying, "We have discovered that when Apple Watch Series 3 joins unauthenticated Wi-Fi networks without connectivity, it may at times prevent the watch from using cellular. We are investigating a fix for a future software release." The new Apple Watch, which costs at least $399 for versions with a cellular connection, opened for preorders last Friday and will begin reaching customers Sept. 22. Apple stock fell more than 1% in early trading Wednesday, and is down 0.4% in the past month, as the S&P 500 index has gained 3.3%.

Former Google CFO joins Twitter board, PepsiCo exec to departFormer Google Inc. Chief Financial Officer Patrick Pichette is joining the board of Twitter Inc. , as PepsiCo Inc. CFO Hugh Johnston leaves to join the board of Microsoft Corp. . Pichette resigned from Google in 2015 after serving as CFO of the web giant for nearly seven years, and will join as an independent director on Dec. 1 for a two-year term. "After taking a two-year sabbatical to spend time with my wife and travel the world, I'm excited to join the Twitter Board and help the company advance its mission," Pichette said in the announcement. Johnston will step down Oct. 1, and explained in Tuesday's announcement that PepsiCo policies limit the number of boards he can join, so his appointment at Microsoft means he must step down at Twitter. After the changes take place, Twitter will have a nine-person board of directors. Twitter shares added 0.6% in late trading, after closing with a 0.9% gain at $17.76.

Bed Bath & Beyond earnings miss widely, stock plunges 18%Bed Bath & Beyond Inc. reported earnings far below expectations Tuesday, citing restructuring- and hurricane-related issues, and promised information on new initiatives later in the afternoon as shares plummeted. The retailer announced fiscal second-quarter profit of $94.2 million, or 67 cents a share, on sales of $2.9 billion, down from earnings of $1.11 a share on revenue of $2.99 billion in the year-ago quarter. Analysts on average expected earnings of 93 cents a share on sales of $3 billion, according to FactSet. Bed Bath & Beyond listed issues that caused the profit miss and their effects, including restructuring charges (8 cents a share), Hurricane Harvey impacts (2 cents a share) and a new accounting standard (a penny a share). The retailer said that it "is undertaking a number of transformational initiatives," which it will discuss in a conference call at 5 p.m. Eastern. Trading was halted for the stock ahead of the announcement, and the price plunged more than 18% in after-hours action after trading resumed; shares closed with a 1% decline at $27.03 Tuesday after reaching a 52-week intraday low of $26.54.

2 top Equifax execs retire in wake of massive data breach Chief security and information officers to depart company immediatelyEquifax Inc. announced Friday afternoon that two top technology executives in its organization had left the company and been replaced immediately, as the company continues to deal with a massive data breach.

North Korea confirms missile launch, nuclear ambitionsNorth Korean state media confirmed Friday that i . A missile flew over Japan before landing in the Pacific Ocean, that a missile fired from North Korea had passed over Japan. According to translations of the report, North Korea leader Kim Jong Un expressed satisfaction with the launch and promised to develop a nuclear arsenal, saying the country is close to that goal. "Our final goal is to establish the equilibrium of real force with the U.S. and make the U.S. rulers dare not talk about military option," Kim said, .

Oracle stock flips to a post-earnings loss after guidanceOracle Corp. stock flipped from a post-earnings gain to a decline in late trading Thursday after the software company's guidance came in below analysts' expectations. , but shares dropped to a decline of about 5% when the company revealed its guidance on a conference call. Co-Chief Executive Safra Catz said Oracle expects adjusted profit of 64 cents to 68 cents a share in the fiscal second quarter, with year-over-year revenue growth of 2% to 4%, all in constant currency. Analysts on average were projecting adjusted earnings of 68 cents a share and revenue growth of about 4.7%, according to FactSet. Oracle stock fell close to $50 a share after closing at $52.79. Oracle set new record closing prices three straight days this week ahead of its earnings report, gaining 37.3% in 2017 through Thursday's close, while the S&P 500 index gained 11.6% in that time.

Nestle to acquire majority interest in Blue Bottle CoffeeNestle SA has agreed to acquire a majority interest in coffee startup Blue Bottle Coffee, an Oakland, California-based chain of coffee shops that had attracted big-name venture investors. Nestle did not provide financial details in announcing the deal, but that the company is paying up to $500 million for two-thirds of the company, valuing it at about $700 million. "This move underlines Nestlé's focus on investing in high-growth categories and acting on consumer trends," Nestle Chief Executive Mark Schneider said in . Nestle said it would continue to run Blue Bottle as a separate company, keeping management like Chief Executive Brian Meehan and Chief Product Officer James Freeman in place. "To us, this deal brings with it an attendant recognition and belief in our accomplishments," Meehan and Freeman said in . The coffee chain, founded in 2002, had attracted more than $120 million in venture investment from the likes of Alphabet Inc.'s Google Ventures, Chris Sacca of "Shark Tank" and Twitter Inc. cofounder Ev Williams, . Nestle stock closed with a 0.1% decline on the Swiss exchange, while its ADR was trading about 0.4% lower Thursday.

How investors can punish Equifax for failing the public If the credit-report service is going to pay an appropriate price for its massive consumer-data breach, action will need to be taken against the stockPoorly executed and reeking of impropriety, Equifax’s response to the company’s failure to perform its most basic task should do permanent damage to the company’s stock and spur federal regulation to protect consumers.

Data center company Switch plans IPOSwitch Inc. , a Las Vegas-based data-center company, filed documents with the Securities and Exchange Commission on Friday afternoon for an initial public offering. Switch owns large data centers in Las Vegas as well as Reno, Nevada, and in Grand Rapids, Michigan, and is developing a new facility in Atlanta. Revenue grew nearly 20% from 2015 to 2016, to $318.4 million, according to the filing, though profits fell more than 50%, from $73.5 million to $31.4 million. Revenue in the first half of 2017 grew about 17% from the same period in 2016, to $181.3 million. The company will use the proceeds to buy out investors in Switch Ltd. and take control of that company though Switch Inc., which was just incorporated in 2017. A multi-class share structure will allow founder and Chief Executive Rob Roy to maintain control, as his shares will have 10 times the voting rights of common shares. Switch plans to list its stock on the New York Stock Exchange under the symbol SWCH.

Equifax executives sold stock after data breach, before informing public SEC filings show sales worth about $1.8 million that were not pre-plannedAfter Equifax Inc. discovered a massive data breach that may have endangered the personal information of up to two-thirds of Americans, but before the company divulged the information, three executives sold their Equifax stock, according to Securities and Exchange Commission filings.

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